While stimulus may help prevent a hard-landing scenario, everyone can at least agree that China is indeed slowing.

What follows are eight charts that all confirm the slowdown.

Chinese Q1 GDP growth was up 7.4% year over year, beating estimates, and 1.4% quarter over quarter, or 5.7% annualized. "We believe that GDP growth has been slightly overestimated in Q1, albeit the downward trend in the economy is clear," said Xindong Chen at BNP Paribas.

Chinese exports tumbled 6.6% in March, compared with an 18.1% decline the previous month. This missed expectations for a 4.8% rise. Meanwhile, imports fell 11.3% missing expectations for a 3.9% rise, and down from a 10.1% rise in February.

Exports saw YoY contractions for two straight months for the first time since late 2009, but this was largely attributed to the "base effect since last year’s figures were flattered by capital flows," said Societe Generale's Wei Yao. As for imports, "the decline in imports of energy products and G3-sourced imports does give rise to concerns about potential weakness in China's domestic demand," according to UBS' Wang Tao.

Industrial production was up 8.8% on the year, this was up from 8.6% in the Jan-Feb period but lower than expectations for a 9% rise. On the face of it, it looks like industrial production saw a rebound, but the number isn't that impressive. "Last year, IP growth slowed by a full percentage point from 9.9% yoy in January-February to 8.9% in March. Hence, the 0.2ppt uptick in the latest report was hardly reassuring," writes Societe Generale's Wei Yao.

Producer prices fell for the 25th straight month, down 2.3% in March. This compares to a 2% fall in February and missed expectations for a 2.2% fall. This is not expected to bode well for industrial production. March IP was up 8.8% in March, above 8.6% from the Jan-Feb period, but below expectations.

Year-to-date fixed asset investment (FAI) was up 17.6%, but decelerated from 17.9% in the Jan-Feb period. The property component of FAI has been the major drag, decelerating to 16.8% from the 19.3% seen previously.

Property sales fell 7.5% year over year in March, while housing starts contracted 21.9%. "The quarterly yoy growth rate of housing sales plummeted from +13.7% in Q4 to -4.7% in Q1, and that of new starts from +33.1% to -25.2%!" writes SocGen's Wei Yao. "The housing sector now poses the biggest downside risk to the Chinese economy," writes Yao.

Credit growth is considered a leading indicator for GDP growth. M2, a broad measure of money supply, climbed 12% on the year in March, a record low. "China’s credit slowdown seems to be increasingly market-driven now, due to rising risk aversion among lenders. Such a slowdown is more difficult for the central bank to arrest," wrote Societe Generale's Wei Yao.

HSBC China manufacturing PMI contracted further falling to 48 in March, from 48.5 the previous month. Meanwhile, official PMI climbed modestly to 50.3, from 50.2 in February. While some experts prefer to watch the official number because of its larger sample, others trust the HSBC series more. "The final reading of the HSBC China Manufacturing PMI in March confirmed the weakness of domestic demand conditions," HSBC economist Hongbin Qu said.

From all the data we've seen recently, the one glimmer of hope came from retail sales, which were up 12.2% year over year in March, from 11.8%. Real retail sales, however, were unchanged at 10.8%, "but, considering a negative base effect, this result offered some relief," said Yao.

Investors continue to worry about a hard landing and China's Minsky moment. But economists point out that Chinese premiere Li Keqiang, while dismissing hopes for a massive stimulus, has said that Beijing will act preemptively to stabilize growth.

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